Suri to live primarily with Katie Holmes, according to divorce settlement with Tom Cruise: Report

Although Tom Cruise and Katie Holmes agreed to keep the
details of their divorce settlement under wraps, details have started to
emerge. The most important one: the battle over their 6-year-old daughter Suri,
of whom the actress requested sole custody in her June 29 filing. According to People
magazine, both Cruise and Holmes agreed that Suri “should live primarily with
her mother in New York City with generous visitation by her father.” Adds a
source, “They both love their daughter and Tom thinks she should be with her
mother … Neither one of them wanted this to be hashed out in public."

Ever since Holmes, 33, surprised Cruise with divorce
papers just days before his 50th birthday, Suri has been spotted
with her mother all over Manhattan. The two, who moved out of the “Rock of
Ages” star’s West Village home and now live in a new three-bedroom apartment in
the Chelsea neighborhood, have visited museums, grabbed lunch with friends, and
gone out for ice cream together. Although Suri has not seen her father since
he’s been filming in Iceland, she does reportedly talk to him on the phone every
day. People also reports that she will be enrolled in a private school
in the city come this fall.

Although she won the war for Suri, Holmes did not get
much in the money battle with Cruise, according to the LA Times. The former
“Dawson’s Creek” actress will not get “any significant money or property” due
to their prenup, a source tells the newspaper. Holmes, the source adds, “was
never after money but wanted to protect her daughter.”

Earlier on Monday, there were reports that Holmes wanted
to banish Scientology from Suri’s life and also wanted a nanny of her choosing
to accompany Suri at all times during visits with her father, but her lawyer
warns that you shouldn’t believe everything you read. "There are numerous
inaccuracies in the reports regarding the purported contents of the agreement
reached between the parties," Jonathan Wolfe said in a statement.
"The agreement is confidential and its terms will not be disclosed."